@@mancubwelder7924 I kind of agree. I have to ask... have you ever seen a lower bucket like the way you left that though? ;-) Add a wear bar to the front of that damn bucket. Above and below the front sticking out about 2.5 inches beyond the sides. Better make this a part 1 and finish that job :-)
Something like this... better off welding a 2.5 inch bottom lip above and below the bucket. It makes a cutting edge to cut roots and sod, saves the bottom of the bucket, and stops material from falling out. The oem buckets bolt wear bars in... that sucks and the bolts don't hold up after years of stones, snow, and rust. If the tractor is an 84 the bucket wear will outlast the tractor :-) Would also be a good project to show hard facing patterns and rods on the top and bottom. Also a good idea to make a gusset along the front like this example has a bolt on... those corners WILL crack without one. Those buckets carry a lot of weight and have an entire tractor pushing them. ironsearch.com/equipment/for-sale/2014-kubota-ap-sl68sllc-bucket/3821093
@@mancubwelder7924 ya man, I agree. Your picking up alot of the presentation dialogue that Moffett used to use ;) that's good brother, he was as thorough and informative as they come. Nice fab skills cub!
I was just going to ask that? I am curious why not? Doesn’t seem that it would be much extra at that point. Mancub, if you read this , maybe let us know your reasoning! Thanks man! 👊
Like videos like this. Because they are practical. Alot of people that's mostly what they do is heavy machinery and farm tractor and implement repairs.
He doesn't mention it but you're gonna want to use knurled drive rolls in the wire feeder when switching over to flux core wire, also tension and other wire feed settings can play a big part in getting good welds when welding with FCAW.
Great project! Neat to see the range of magnetic holders used now days that I'm more recently learning about since I don't recall anything other than the arrow looking ones. Just watched a build video yesterday on the adjustable angle design. Those seem handy and worth the investment like the other twist to lock ones. Interesting the flux core with gas also and recently learned about the argon oxy you demonstrated as I've not seen that before either. Thanks for sharing!
As an old timer let me make a suggestion, get used to using a shop vac whenever possible. It a lot cleaner and it stays out of your eyes and lungs. I know it’s like old habit to grab an air blower but the clean up is a lot better as well. FWIW
@@thechronicgeneralist not sure what you mean. Obviously you could roll it away when your burning. I’m just referring to the wire wheeling and blowing the dirt away. And it’s not going to be an always option I’m just saying it’s cleaner in the shop and healthier over time not to have all the dirt and crap floating around in the air
@@thechronicgeneralist he was talking about cleaning up prior to welding. Suck the stuff into a filtered container instead of blowing it all up into the air with a blow down valve or wirewheeling it into the air, then breathing it. It keeps the shop far cleaner, and more importantly, keeps it out of your lungs. The same can be said for cleaning up. Vacuum with a good filter and a particulate bag if possible instead of sweeping. Keeps it out of the air.
I really like the Mancub. From a viewer's perspective he definitely has grown and his confidence in his abilities have definitely improved. However he repeats himself A LOT.
After Jason, Bob, the camera guy, and some of the guests I’ve seen over the last few years ManCub is my favorite person to watch on the channel...JK ManCub. Nice job on your bucket rebuild. I’ve learned a lot from y’all over the years.
Can't help but comment a lotta folks seem like they think they know better I would like to see them do this and put it out there for everyone to comment on. I've rebuilt buckets not many and not often but they take a ton of time and a ton of work. A Kubota is not a skidsteer, loader, excavator, or bulldozer. Once cub is done with it that bucket will last a damn long time. Get over yourselves you know who you are
I work for a company that makes farm equipment. I've made few buckets there and one thing I've got to say is that you really should put a hardened cutting edge on the front of that bucket. If not that won't last any length of time. looks good otherwise.
if the bucket was rusted out, but the sides are still good... just lay the new plate cut to size on the exterior of the bucket, weld into the sides as well as the mounting locations. "lay the plate over the bucket and burn it on". a 4 foot by 6 foot sheet of 1/8 hot roll is $250 and $60 for the rod. i see a hitch ball, so to reinforce that I would rosette weld additional 1/8'' sheet in descending sizes. 1/8'' is liter then 3/16''... can rosette weld a strip or two of the 1/8'' on the interior to reinforce the mounting lug locations... i made a mount for a snow plow on a 1974 power ram, used less then two and a half feet of 1/8x3''L channel. some rusty old stripped bolts made a good brace for the plow pins to push up on, just burned em on to it.
nice job man cub. maybe next time, cut panels by hand like the rest of us without plasma tables do....would you trace and cut or cut out a form for a torch rest?
I am next....but here in Ballynahinch I have two buckets waiting repair so will watch this later......I need a harder edge than the one that wore out....
@MPM Welding I have just ordered two boxes to see how far they go.......It will be a WHOLE LOAD OF BURNING for the area needed...Thanks for the encouragement.
Hey man. Nice videos. Question. What was that spreader clamp you were using inside the bucket when you were putting everything back together? Thank you.
greqat job man cub.what was thing bar type thing you used to push the bucket apart? at 11.05 . it was some kind of spreader type bar?is there a propper name for it?
Nice video. If the bucket is original (‘83) then it’s 37 years old. If I was paying money to have it fixed, I wouldn’t be happy with the top edge/lip. In fact that just screams “‘not professional”. If that was replaced, then would have been far faster making a entire new bucket and re-using the brackets like some other people have commented. The fastest/easiest/cheapest way is to do the job you did was use the cut off wheel from the word “GO”. No need for the gas. The flux core wire is something I’m interested in as only use hard wire MIG in the workshop, but we didn’t get to see any welds. Or what is going to be done with the “cutting edge” of the bucket. Overall a strange video. Nice to see a project, from my perspective, but not a finished video.
ManCub Welder well it’s still nice work👍 and I do get it (we’re living in a throw away world) that’s why I said challenge excepted. Sorry if it came off wrong wasn’t my intention. Just meant it was a lot of work is all
Could you guys do a video on welding ductile iron to mild steel? Im going to be rebuilding a set of ford F250 axles and i want to weld the axle tubes to the housing and I'd just like to see the best way to do it.
@@OrdnanceOffroad i saw that video and I wasn't too impressed with it most of his videos are good but he had some guesswork in his weld. And this truck is going to be a on road vehicle so it needs to be done right. Thanks for the reply though
Wow friend, the frog of that Bucket is an authentic piece of shit. Perhaps, you make a good job with panel sides amd the manttle. Best regards from Chile.
I did a refurb/rebuild job on a roughly 6ft wide tractor bucket not long ago. It turned out to be quite a big job. Had a few issues like you do and all of them presented challenges along the way. Have posted videos of the task. Tidy job there Mancub, you should try repairing some old rusted out farm gates like I do!
But did you make it out of AR400F abrasive plate? I find that holds up a lot longer for digging equipment. Especially with a touch of hardfacing rod in key places.
where the arc shot videos ? is this a fabrication channel now? might as well show us how to mount the bucket back on the tractor too.... nice work tho man cub
So in real life, given that you've basically scrapped 75% of the original metal and then had to spend a huge amount of time cutting, grinding, and cleaning, and you also expanded the size, if a customer came to you with this job, would you still do the same thing, or just fabricate a whole new bucket and scrap the old one? I'm also assuming you'd put in a new wear edge at the bottom of the bucket vs leaving it as plain sheet as you have..
They're using a duel shield wire. I have ran a bunch of it in the past. From my understanding the flux helps with the impurities and the gas is for shielding. That wire has to have gas to run correctly. It runs hot and fast. There are self shielded flux core but i haven't ran any of that. Edit: I looked up BÖHLER ti 70 pipe to be sure and it needs gas shilding.
Weld angle to keep the buckets original dimensions. Especially when cutting the sides or cutting edge. Ditch the oxy fuel torch and use a Plasma cutter 👌🏻
Not sure where you are. But my local airgas was cool with it. Airgas does not fill on site. They swap out tanks. If you get info on the tanks (serial numbers) and talk to your local weld supply about if they will swap those tanks out you should be all set. Some stores won't take a certin age tank.
@@chrisdoeg5199 im in middlsex county New Jersey. Okay thanks, I've seen alot of old tanks for dirt cheap and was about to buy one today actually. What do you think about renting or leasing?
@@arielkozak renting vs leasing depends on use. Most opt for lease. In my are (mass) it's $100 for the year per bottle. So you pay $200 up front on your account for the lease, then the cost for refill initially. Then for that 12months you only pay the refill charge so if your not established or sure what kind of bottles you'll need (the lease fee for me was per bottle not per type so I could swap from oxy to argon or anything in between within that year and only pay refill price) but if you can get a cheap set of tanks that your local will approve you swapping out, then that's the way to go. Then you can keep a set of tanks forever and if you never need them refilled you won't pay yearly.
Not impressed, nice to Weld doing old stuff, but some of us do this daily. Everything is done by hand, no paper or program. Plasma or cut off would been faster. Never mentioned what this bucket was going to be used for? Rock, dirt manure? Any of the buckets I deal with get grade 50 ¼, minimum... What about the cutting edges? Bolt on or weld? Wear strips? How would you deal with the warpage? Sorry for the rant... Thanks for showing us real world repairs but needed to be closer to farm.
why would you do all that screwing around just slap some plate on there hit with 6011 rod and call it a day...... to much playing around looks like that weaver guy in the comments is familiar but honestly you could get plenty of life out of it with much less work when your a farmer that has no days off you fix things like that because there is already plenty of work to be done no need to make more
Its like watching a nervous junky looking to sell his moms dishes in a parking lot for that next hit of "H".......this is really hurting your channel....
mancub has camera anxiety, give him a break. he got the job done and is getting better each video. i have seen him make excellent welds. what is your fabrication channel?
Kid, your presentation skills are getting better in every video. You’ve slowed way down and yr confidence is growing daily. Keep it up!
Thanks Sterling.
@@mancubwelder7924 I kind of agree. I have to ask... have you ever seen a lower bucket like the way you left that though? ;-)
Add a wear bar to the front of that damn bucket. Above and below the front sticking out about 2.5 inches beyond the sides.
Better make this a part 1 and finish that job :-)
Something like this... better off welding a 2.5 inch bottom lip above and below the bucket. It makes a cutting edge to cut roots and sod, saves the bottom of the bucket, and stops material from falling out. The oem buckets bolt wear bars in... that sucks and the bolts don't hold up after years of stones, snow, and rust. If the tractor is an 84 the bucket wear will outlast the tractor :-)
Would also be a good project to show hard facing patterns and rods on the top and bottom. Also a good idea to make a gusset along the front like this example has a bolt on... those corners WILL crack without one. Those buckets carry a lot of weight and have an entire tractor pushing them.
ironsearch.com/equipment/for-sale/2014-kubota-ap-sl68sllc-bucket/3821093
@@mancubwelder7924 ya man, I agree. Your picking up alot of the presentation dialogue that Moffett used to use ;) that's good brother, he was as thorough and informative as they come. Nice fab skills cub!
At this point, I think I would have just cut the heavy pivot parts off the back and welded them to a completely newly fabricated bucket.
I was just going to ask that? I am curious why not? Doesn’t seem that it would be much extra at that point. Mancub, if you read this , maybe let us know your reasoning!
Thanks man! 👊
Really enjoying the Man Cub videos. He gets better with each video. He comes across as very sincere and down to earth. Great job!
Excellent operating
Thanks
I can watch these kinda videos all day. I cant wait to get into a job where I'm doing this all the time.
Like videos like this. Because they are practical. Alot of people that's mostly what they do is heavy machinery and farm tractor and implement repairs.
But this not how we fix this stuff. Wouldn't last 5 minutes with skid steer operator
Not done yet. Part2 is coming up
Thanks everyone. You the best 👌. Episode 2 will be cutting edge with my personal touches. Thanks for the tips
He doesn't mention it but you're gonna want to use knurled drive rolls in the wire feeder when switching over to flux core wire, also tension and other wire feed settings can play a big part in getting good welds when welding with FCAW.
Good job Mancub
Thanks Marco
Awesome job. I made bucket for excavators from scratch.
Thanks
Nice video thank you.
Thank you 4 watching weld.com
Great project! Neat to see the range of magnetic holders used now days that I'm more recently learning about since I don't recall anything other than the arrow looking ones. Just watched a build video yesterday on the adjustable angle design. Those seem handy and worth the investment like the other twist to lock ones. Interesting the flux core with gas also and recently learned about the argon oxy you demonstrated as I've not seen that before either. Thanks for sharing!
Nice rebuild dude!!
Thanks.👍
As an old timer let me make a suggestion, get used to using a shop vac whenever possible. It a lot cleaner and it stays out of your eyes and lungs. I know it’s like old habit to grab an air blower but the clean up is a lot better as well. FWIW
Wouldn't a shop vac risk catching fire though? :O
@@thechronicgeneralist not sure what you mean. Obviously you could roll it away when your burning. I’m just referring to the wire wheeling and blowing the dirt away. And it’s not going to be an always option I’m just saying it’s cleaner in the shop and healthier over time not to have all the dirt and crap floating around in the air
@@thechronicgeneralist he was talking about cleaning up prior to welding. Suck the stuff into a filtered container instead of blowing it all up into the air with a blow down valve or wirewheeling it into the air, then breathing it. It keeps the shop far cleaner, and more importantly, keeps it out of your lungs.
The same can be said for cleaning up. Vacuum with a good filter and a particulate bag if possible instead of sweeping. Keeps it out of the air.
ManCUB! Nice to see ya brother & thanks for sharing with us!
Good videos. Miss the old man, reminds me of a mill weight I used to work with.
It would have helped to see close up shots of the welds. I like watching farm equipment repair videos but some close up shots would have been nice.
I really like the Mancub. From a viewer's perspective he definitely has grown and his confidence in his abilities have definitely improved. However he repeats himself A LOT.
After Jason, Bob, the camera guy, and some of the guests I’ve seen over the last few years ManCub is my favorite person to watch on the channel...JK ManCub. Nice job on your bucket rebuild. I’ve learned a lot from y’all over the years.
play nice!
Can't help but comment a lotta folks seem like they think they know better I would like to see them do this and put it out there for everyone to comment on. I've rebuilt buckets not many and not often but they take a ton of time and a ton of work. A Kubota is not a skidsteer, loader, excavator, or bulldozer. Once cub is done with it that bucket will last a damn long time. Get over yourselves you know who you are
I fixed a laser bucket I really enjoyed how I could lay really long stringers and 5 years later still be used
Digging the music
I work for a company that makes farm equipment. I've made few buckets there and one thing I've got to say is that you really should put a hardened cutting edge on the front of that bucket. If not that won't last any length of time. looks good otherwise.
Episode 2 will be good
So much fun , cheers Mancub...
Thanks 👋
if the bucket was rusted out, but the sides are still good... just lay the new plate cut to size on the exterior of the bucket, weld into the sides as well as the mounting locations. "lay the plate over the bucket and burn it on". a 4 foot by 6 foot sheet of 1/8 hot roll is $250 and $60 for the rod. i see a hitch ball, so to reinforce that I would rosette weld additional 1/8'' sheet in descending sizes. 1/8'' is liter then 3/16''... can rosette weld a strip or two of the 1/8'' on the interior to reinforce the mounting lug locations... i made a mount for a snow plow on a 1974 power ram, used less then two and a half feet of 1/8x3''L channel. some rusty old stripped bolts made a good brace for the plow pins to push up on, just burned em on to it.
Letsssss Gooooooooo!!!!!! Let’s see a Hardfacing Video Next ManCub
It's coming
Yeah👍
Good job man, I appreciate the videos
Thanks Joshua. We appreciate 🙏 you for watching 👀. Weld.com
That's right, you always want to move to different spots when welding.
Yes Sir
nice job man cub. maybe next time, cut panels by hand like the rest of us without plasma tables do....would you trace and cut or cut out a form for a torch rest?
I am next....but here in Ballynahinch I have two buckets waiting repair so will watch this later......I need a harder edge than the one that wore out....
@MPM Welding I have just ordered two boxes to see how far they go.......It will be a WHOLE LOAD OF BURNING for the area needed...Thanks for the encouragement.
Faster and cheaper to just build a new bucket! Maybe done for our education?
Great video MC!!
Thanks Steve. Appreciate 👀 weld.com.
No cutting edge on the bucket?
Hell, even a strip of 1/4" carbon (even better if AR steel) stitch welded on would be better than nothing.
Welding is a profession that will always be here good video mancub!
Looks great! Can someone bring in a trailer with a bent drop leg jack and show how to remove it and weld the new one up.
Hey man. Nice videos. Question. What was that spreader clamp you were using inside the bucket when you were putting everything back together? Thank you.
I'm an amateur, which probably explains why I don't understand why you used gas with flux core. Please explain. Garrett
You forgot to put a cutting edge on that bucket. Don't neglect to do this or the front edge of that nice bucket won't last long!
PART 2 COMING UP
howdy man cub... the ear tabs you didnt like were from an after market fork lift kit... fyi 😁 i added one to my buddies kubota 😁
Ohhh thanks.
greqat job man cub.what was thing bar type thing you used to push the bucket apart? at 11.05 . it was some kind of spreader type bar?is there a propper name for it?
Almost to the point to just build from scratch
Nice video. If the bucket is original (‘83) then it’s 37 years old. If I was paying money to have it fixed, I wouldn’t be happy with the top edge/lip. In fact that just screams “‘not professional”. If that was replaced, then would have been far faster making a entire new bucket and re-using the brackets like some other people have commented. The fastest/easiest/cheapest way is to do the job you did was use the cut off wheel from the word “GO”. No need for the gas. The flux core wire is something I’m interested in as only use hard wire MIG in the workshop, but we didn’t get to see any welds. Or what is going to be done with the “cutting edge” of the bucket. Overall a strange video. Nice to see a project, from my perspective, but not a finished video.
We will show the welds in episode 2. Right at the beginning. NEW CAMERA GUY..HE IS LEARNING
Episode 2 will be interesting. It will be a surprise
Looking forward to it. Love a project video, and all the tips and ideas that go with it. Keep em coming!! 👍
Are you adding any wear plates to the bucket?
Stay tune to part 2
Top man what welder do u use
With the work it took to cut that one up you could have just made a whole new bucket! But save old bucket challenge excepted I guess🤷♂️
I want to show that something look like garage can be brought back to life. Trying to open people minds up
ManCub Welder well it’s still nice work👍 and I do get it (we’re living in a throw away world) that’s why I said challenge excepted. Sorry if it came off wrong wasn’t my intention. Just meant it was a lot of work is all
Dude, not to razz you but you should start wearing a respirator when grinding and buffing shit out. You don't want to breathe that shit in man
Could you guys do a video on welding ductile iron to mild steel? Im going to be rebuilding a set of ford F250 axles and i want to weld the axle tubes to the housing and I'd just like to see the best way to do it.
Dirt Lifestyle did just that here ruclips.net/video/PUDdvubpQ1g/видео.html
@@OrdnanceOffroad i saw that video and I wasn't too impressed with it most of his videos are good but he had some guesswork in his weld. And this truck is going to be a on road vehicle so it needs to be done right.
Thanks for the reply though
Wow friend, the frog of that Bucket is an authentic piece of shit. Perhaps, you make a good job with panel sides amd the manttle.
Best regards from Chile.
I did a refurb/rebuild job on a roughly 6ft wide tractor bucket not long ago. It turned out to be quite a big job. Had a few issues like you do and all of them presented challenges along the way. Have posted videos of the task. Tidy job there Mancub, you should try repairing some old rusted out farm gates like I do!
Thanks. Where is the videos
👏👏
Are those magnetic clamps you are using?
can you do a excavator bucket? like shanks for the teeth... would be much appreciated
What steel did you use? You did finish by putting a lip on?
Just use a36. Don't have ar50. Using what I have on hand. Stay tune to the next episode. It will be good
I must have missed what size wire you were using
I heard him mention .045 flux core
But did you make it out of AR400F abrasive plate? I find that holds up a lot longer for digging equipment. Especially with a touch of hardfacing rod in key places.
No ar400f. Stay tune for another episode of the bucket.
It's coming in part 2. We're going to build a wear blade and do some hard facing
Will be adding more stuff to the bucket. Stay tuned
You saved 5% of the bucket, why not build from scratch?
Flux core with gas?.....dual shield maybe?
where the arc shot videos ? is this a fabrication channel now? might as well show us how to mount the bucket back on the tractor too.... nice work tho man cub
You've made a silk purse out of a sow's ear
So in real life, given that you've basically scrapped 75% of the original metal and then had to spend a huge amount of time cutting, grinding, and cleaning, and you also expanded the size, if a customer came to you with this job, would you still do the same thing, or just fabricate a whole new bucket and scrap the old one? I'm also assuming you'd put in a new wear edge at the bottom of the bucket vs leaving it as plain sheet as you have..
Would have looked for a used bucket
My thoughts exactly all that work and it might have been just cheaper to find a used one or maybe a new one
Im on weldTok again.
I loved the content and the project, but was disappointed that you fast forwarded over the welding. Please show the actual welding process.
You need to add a wear blade to your bucket or that edge is going to wear out fast
It's coming in part 2. We're going to build a wear blade and do some hard facing
I would like to have a light Duty bucket for my four wheeler that I could hookup to my smow plow Attachment.
where is the cutting edge, maybe next episode.
Part 2 coming up
flux core and gas? new to welding (so I'll ask my numb question lol)...why both?
He explains the process in the video
He explains the process in the video
no cutting edges?
Part 2
Dude, we are here to see pretty welds and you just left us blueballing. Not cool.
Blame that on the camera 📷 guy. The Welds look 👍 good.
ManCub Welder you did the camera guy dirty, he gets blamed for everything hahahaha
Where’s the hard face edge?
It's coming in part 2. We're going to build a wear blade and do some hard facing
Don’t that bucket get a weld on cutting-edge
They should have hardened it
How much would you charge if you did this for a customer?
That music...
Thanks not a bucket more like a shovel lol
0:50 P2 mask mate..
wet dreams you crazy man
Lol
@@mancubwelder7924 i had many wet dreams
No hardface?
Part 2
I’d change that name. Makes you sound light in the loafers.
Flux core with gas. Why
Yeah I’m wondering the same thing.
They're using a duel shield wire. I have ran a bunch of it in the past. From my understanding the flux helps with the impurities and the gas is for shielding. That wire has to have gas to run correctly. It runs hot and fast. There are self shielded flux core but i haven't ran any of that.
Edit: I looked up BÖHLER ti 70 pipe to be sure and it needs gas shilding.
I want something to bite in really good.
Thats right Andrew
Why wouldn't you use mig or just stick weld it
Cuz he didn't feel like it 😂
Weld angle to keep the buckets original dimensions. Especially when cutting the sides or cutting edge. Ditch the oxy fuel torch and use a Plasma cutter 👌🏻
Any one think I should buy oxy acetylene tanks on craigslist?
Not sure where you are. But my local airgas was cool with it. Airgas does not fill on site. They swap out tanks. If you get info on the tanks (serial numbers) and talk to your local weld supply about if they will swap those tanks out you should be all set. Some stores won't take a certin age tank.
@@chrisdoeg5199 im in middlsex county New Jersey. Okay thanks, I've seen alot of old tanks for dirt cheap and was about to buy one today actually. What do you think about renting or leasing?
@@arielkozak renting vs leasing depends on use. Most opt for lease. In my are (mass) it's $100 for the year per bottle. So you pay $200 up front on your account for the lease, then the cost for refill initially. Then for that 12months you only pay the refill charge so if your not established or sure what kind of bottles you'll need (the lease fee for me was per bottle not per type so I could swap from oxy to argon or anything in between within that year and only pay refill price) but if you can get a cheap set of tanks that your local will approve you swapping out, then that's the way to go. Then you can keep a set of tanks forever and if you never need them refilled you won't pay yearly.
@@chrisdoeg5199 thanks for the tip
Been quicker making a new bucket chief , rather than piss about with that old scrapper
I like to take the ugly things that people call junk and make it nice again. I like to see there face expression when they see it.
Is it just me, or did anyone else think he rushed threw it like he was doubled parked.
His sentences, or the bucket.😂
@@kylekyle8731 You're a class act man.
First oneeee bby
Outstanding
7 years of good luck coming at ya 💯🤟🏼
Not impressed, nice to Weld doing old stuff, but some of us do this daily. Everything is done by hand, no paper or program. Plasma or cut off would been faster. Never mentioned what this bucket was going to be used for? Rock, dirt manure? Any of the buckets I deal with get grade 50 ¼, minimum... What about the cutting edges? Bolt on or weld? Wear strips? How would you deal with the warpage?
Sorry for the rant... Thanks for showing us real world repairs but needed to be closer to farm.
What the hell did he say ?
Poor video
Was guna be a great video but ye rushed through it ye skipped the best bits of the video 🤬🤬
Boy Cub, slow down when talking. Take a breath now and then, you always sound like your out of breath, relax a little!!!
why would you do all that screwing around just slap some plate on there hit with 6011 rod and call it a day...... to much playing around looks like that weaver guy in the comments is familiar but honestly you could get plenty of life out of it with much less work when your a farmer that has no days off you fix things like that because there is already plenty of work to be done no need to make more
Its like watching a nervous junky looking to sell his moms dishes in a parking lot for that next hit of "H".......this is really hurting your channel....
I’m not saying man cub doesn’t know what he’s doing but it sounds like he constantly needs to clear his throat throughout all his videos.
mancub has camera anxiety, give him a break. he got the job done and is getting better each video. i have seen him make excellent welds. what is your fabrication channel?
Lighten up, Lucy. He’s not a trained teacher or presenter. He is making great strides in both endeavors, however. Go, Kid, Go.
@@skouson hey man you wanna buy some dishes bro? 5 bucks
Nice work.